[[WMG:[[center:[-''[[Series/DoctorWho Doctor Who]]'' [[Recap/DoctorWho recap index]]\\
'''Eleventh Doctor Era'''\\
'''Series 5:''' [[Recap/DoctorWhoS31E1TheEleventhHour 1]] | '''2''' | [[Recap/DoctorWhoS31E3VictoryOfTheDaleks 3]] | [[Recap/DoctorWhoS31E4TheTimeOfAngels 4]] | [[Recap/DoctorWhoS31E5FleshAndStone 5]] | [[Recap/DoctorWhoS31E6TheVampiresOfVenice 6]] | [[Recap/DoctorWhoS31E7AmysChoice 7]] | [[Recap/DoctorWhoS31E8TheHungryEarth 8]] | [[Recap/DoctorWhoS31E9ColdBlood 9]] | [[Recap/DoctorWhoS31E10VincentAndTheDoctor 10]] | [[Recap/DoctorWhoS31E11TheLodger 11]] | [[Recap/DoctorWhoS31E12ThePandoricaOpens 12]] | [[Recap/DoctorWhoS31E13TheBigBang 13]] | [[Recap/DoctorWho2010CSAChristmasCarol CS]]\\
'''[[Recap/DoctorWhoS30E14TheNextDoctor <<< 2009 Specials]]''' | '''[[Recap/DoctorWhoS32E1TheImpossibleAstronaut Series 6 >>>]]''']]-]]]
!The Beast Below
[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/The_Beast_Below_6799.jpg]]
[[caption-width-right:350:...who peed in ''your'' corn flakes?]]
->Written by Creator/StevenMoffat\\
Directed by Andrew Gunn\\
'''Production code:''' 1.2\\
'''Air date:''' 10 April 2010

->[[labelnote:FORGET]]''A horse and a man: above, below/One has a plan, but both must go/Mile after mile, above, beneath/One has a smile, and one has teeth/Though the man above might say hello/Expect no love from the beast below.''\\
-- '''Creepy Little Girl'''[[/labelnote]]

->[[labelnote:PROTEST]]''In bed above we're deep asleep/While greater love lies further deep/This dream must end, this world must know/We all depend on the beast below.''\\
-- '''Amy'''[[/labelnote]]

->[--''[[https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/wysiwyg_source_editor.php?groupname=Recap&title=DoctorWhoS31E2TheBeastBelow&load=source RECORD]]''--]
%% If any bots have intruded, this is supposed to lead to the edit button.

%% This isn't a trick, this is for real. You have to find the back button on your browser, and get back to the TV Tropes recap page for "The Beast Below". Please, don't add any natter.

JustForFun/{{The one w|ith}}here the Doctor and Amy get un-vored.
----

Inside Starship UK, a group of children sit in class waiting to be graded by their instructor, a smiling robot, which is apparently only capable of repeating the same three compliments. But one boy, Timmy, is a bit reluctant to stand in front of the robot, and as he finally musters up the courage, the robot's expression changes into a sour frown, as it tells him that he has been a bad boy and he is rewarded with the grade "Zero". As he leaves the class to board the vator, his friend, Mandy, warns him against boarding, as students with a zero aren't allowed to ride the vators and will be "sent below" if they do. Timmy, however, doesn't want to walk twenty decks to get home, so he ignores her warning and boards another vator. Inside the vator, another smiling robot sits embedded in the wall, but it changes its expression to the same frown as the teacher robot when Timmy enters. As the vator starts up, a monitor turns on, showing a little girl reciting a poem. Eventually the vator robot's expression changes again, this time to a furious expression with glowing red eyes, and that is when Timmy notices to his horror that the vator isn't heading for his intended destination of London, but instead drops down to Floor 0, with the floor in the vator opening to a red chasm beneath him. Timmy screams in terror, and falls in...

After the intro, we find ourselves immediately after the events of the previous episode, the Doctor takes Amy to the distant future, where she finds Britain [[foldercontrol]]

[[folder: in space! ]]
After solar flares roasted the Earth, every nation took to the skies. Starship UK houses the future of the British people, as they search the stars for a new home. They land in what seems to be a normal, nice and British marketplace, but the Doctor tells Amy to "notice everything" — they're actually in the midst of a police state, noticing a crying Mandy sitting on a bench, and points out that everybody ignores her and she tries to cry as silently as possible. Then he places a glass of water on the floor, for seemingly no reason. "[[BlatantLies There's an escaped fish]]"? Oh really? Well, Doctor, you're being watched, and it seems that you just did "the thing"...

The Doctor notices that everyone is terrified of those smiling robot fellows in the booths, so he sends Amy to interrogate Mandy. She does so, and Mandy leads her to what is apparently a hole in the road, which is covered with a work tent and sealed off for some reason. Despite Mandy's warnings of getting too close, Amy can't stop herself from investigating the hole, which happens to contain what appears to be a tentacle. That's weird, but what's weirder is the sinister-looking group of hooded fellows spraying her with sleeping gas.

Meanwhile, the Doctor is off staying out of trouble (badly), and has headed to the engine room, to find another glass of water. Something's very wrong here — "an impossible truth", as the mysterious woman in front of him calls it. She wears a spooky mask and a red cloak, and demands to know the Doctor's business with that water. Were there an engine on a ship this big, there would be vibrations. The water would move! The woman needs the Doctor's help in unearthing the truth, and tells him that her name is... Liz 10.

Amy wakes up in a "voting booth", and there are three buttons before her — [[/folder]]

[[folder: protest, ]]
[[/folder]]

[[folder: forget ]]
and [[/folder]]

[[folder: record ]]
. She is identified (Age 1,306?! Shut up!), and a film starts to play on the TV screen before her, apparently detailing the history of Starship UK. Suddenly, a whirlwind of images flashes by. Children screaming, violence, terror, pain and most prominently... the Sun. But no sooner is it all over than Amy finds her hand on the [[/folder]]

[[folder: forget ]]
button. What just happened in those last 20 minutes? A clue to this is offered as Amy's recorded message to herself starts to play. On screen, a distressed Amy pleads "This isn't a trick, this is for real, you've got to find the Doctor and get him off this ship!"

Just then, the Doctor arrives. He examines the light bulb at the top of the room — standard memory wipe, must have erased about 20 minutes. But why? And why would Amy choose to forget? Well, according to Mandy everyone does. But the Doctor isn't scared, and smacks the [[/folder]]

[[folder: protest ]]
button. Unfortunately, this opens up the floor and catapults both him and Amy down an air-pressure cannon. They land in what appears to be a rubbish dump. But the Doctor soon figures out that it's a tongue. So they're in a giant mouth. Great. The Doctor triggers the un-voring of him and Amy to escape, but the switch to exit this dark chamber... is a [[/folder]]

[[folder: forget ]]
button. And those Smiler androids in the back are getting pretty irritable.

The two are rescued from the Smilers by Liz 10, who takes them up to her quarters whilst making remarks about the Doctor's history with her kingdom. And why is it ''her'' kingdom? Well, that would be because she's been Queen Elizabeth X of England for 10 years! They slowed her body clock to keep her looking like the stamps. In her room, there are a lot of water glasses. And her mask... it's rather old. Very, very old, an antique. Porcelain, too. Stays on because it's perfectly sculpted to her face. So what? So ''everything'', Liz... Just then, some of those hooded blokes show up and ask to take Liz to the Tower of London. She refuses, but it seems that ''these'' particular politicians are half-Smiler.

Down in the Tower's torture chamber they find a rather odd installation: a laser in the ceiling perpetually fires shots into part of a very large brain. Piecing together the puzzle, the Doctor figures out that this pain centre, the mouth and the tentacle from earlier are all part of one creature, and... it's what they have instead of an engine. And they're torturing it to keep it going. And then we find out what's wrong with Liz's mask. It's at least 200 years old... and perfectly sculpted to her face. Wait, that can't be right, she's only been Queen for 10 years! Oh... dear. The same 10 years... over and over again, always leading her to this same place — a voting booth. It's her choice: [[/folder]]

[[folder: forget ]]
or [[/folder]]

[[folder: abdicate ]]
. Her own recorded message to herself starts to play.

When the solar flares originally roasted the Earth, the UK weren't quite quick enough to make a ship. Their children were screaming as the skies grew hotter. But then it came... like a miracle... a Star Whale. A massive, old, gentle creature, and the last of its kind. They trapped it, built the starship around it, and now they torture it to keep it moving. Heartbreaking. But hey, at least they feed it... with rubbish... and people. Protesters and citizens of limited value, to be precise. But it won't eat the children, like Timmy, who are instead locked up inside the Tower. If Liz chooses to [[/folder]]

[[folder: abdicate ]]
the ship will disintegrate and everyone will die. But if she chooses to [[/folder]]

[[folder: forget, ]]
the poor old SpaceWhale will be in agony for another decade.

The Doctor realises that Amy recorded that message to herself ("Get the Doctor off this ship!") because she didn't want the Doctor to have to make an impossible choice. Heart's in the right place, but witholding information from the Doctor is a bad move, Amy — you don't decide what he needs to know. He tells her that her days as his new companion are over already. Damn Doc. The Doctor [[TakeAThirdOption Takes a Third Option]], preparing to lobotomize the whale so at least it won't be in pain. He says that it's the most horrible thing he'll ever have to do, and he'll just have to pick a new name because he can't do this and live with himself as the Doctor any longer, but there's nothing else that can be done.

Seeing the tentacles playing with Mandy and Timmy, Amy takes the Doctor's advice from earlier and notices everything — ''"it won't eat the children", "our children screamed!", "It came like a miracle,", "Never interfere in the affairs of other peoples or planets, unless there's children crying?", "Just me now", "The last of its kind"''. And then she realizes the truth.

She grabs Liz's hand to press the [[/folder]]

[[folder: abdicate ]]
button and release the whale, at which point Starship UK starts moving ''faster''. But why? Surely it would take its opportunity to escape? No, the kindly old SpaceWhale simply ''wanted'' to help in the first place. They didn't need to torture or trap it. It came because it couldn't bear to see the children cry.

Afterwards, the Doctor tells Amy she couldn't have known that. She responds that maybe ''he'' couldn't have known, but that an alien, the LastOfHisKind, who has been through such pain and anguish, and just become kinder and unable to see children cry, was something ''she'd'' already seen. The Doctor stares at her for a minute, then yanks her into his arms and buries his face in her shoulder; given that it's been ''less than twenty four hours since he regenerated'' he has not had a good day - crashing into Earth and now this. They return to the TARDIS when the console's phone starts ringing. It's UsefulNotes/WinstonChurchill, and [[Recap/DoctorWhoS31E3VictoryOfTheDaleks he wants the Doctor's help, while a Dalek is standing in his office]].

As they leave, though, we see that there's [[ArcSymbol a crack]] in the starship...

----
!!Tropes:
* ActionGirl: Liz 10 oneshots a Smiler each with her [[GunsAkimbo dual pistols]].
* AdmiringTheAbomination: The Doctor can't stop himself from admiring the Star Whale even while standing on its tongue.
-->"How big is this beastie? It's gorgeous! If this is just the mouth, I'd love to see the stomach!"\\
''[ominous gurgle]''\\
"... but not right now."
* AlienNonInterferenceClause: The Doctor claims that he never interferes with peoples or planets, [[BlatantLies despite every other episode of the show]]. (And then he [[InstantlyProvenWrong immediately goes to comfort a crying child]].)
* AmnesiacsAreInnocent: Averted. The Doctor holds both Amy and Liz 10 responsible for what they've done, regardless of the fact that they fail to remember doing it.
* AmnesiaLoop: Liz 10 discovers that she has been living and forgetting the same ten-year reign for 200 years, looking for the truth but always agreeing to forget it after discovering it. The Doctor and Amy's intervention leads to the loop being broken when Amy finds a way to TakeAThirdOption.
* ApocalypseHow: Solar flares toasted the Earth; probably rating Total Extinction. Destroying Starship UK would only be on a regional scope, as other nations have their own starships.
* TheAtoner: Queen Elizabeth X finally assumes this role when she realizes she's been choosing to forget the truth about the Star Whale continuously.
* AttackOfTheMonsterAppendage: The tentacles/stingers are seen at various places in the ship before the reveal that they are all part of the body of the Star Whale.
* AuthorAppeal: Scotland has its own spaceship.
* BadassBoast:
-->'''Liz 10:''' I'm the bloody Queen, mate! Basically, I rule.
* BadVibrations: Inverted — the Doctor's first hint of the Beast's existence is when he notices that the liquid in a glass of water ''isn't'' vibrating, which it would be if the ship had engines running.
* BigBad: Hawthorne, the head of the British government who oversees the secret police known as Winders and is responsible for the torture of the Star Whale. He initially appears to be working against Liz 10, only for it to turn out that he's actually [[PunchClockVillain acting under her orders]]...[[LaserGuidedAmnesia she just can't remember giving them]].
* BigDamnHeroes: Liz 10 blasting those Smilers, saving the Doctor and Amy.
* BizarreAlienBiology: The Star Whale grows tentacles into the ship and has some sort of anti-squid tentacular tail.
* BlatantLies: The Doctor tells Amy he never interferes and that he always stays out of trouble ("badly").
* BookEnds:
-->'''Creepy Girl:''' ... expect no love from [[TitleDrop the beast below]].\\\
'''Amy:''' ... we all depend on [[TitleDrop the beast below]].
* BrokenAngel: That poor Star Whale. It's an ancient and majestic creature that has been shackled and tortured constantly for centuries.
* ButThouMust: The Powers That Be encourage people to [[/folder]]

[[folder: forget ]]
by:
** Keeping the Protest threshold low (if 1% of the passengers [[/folder]]

[[folder: protest ]]
, everybody dies),
** Making Her Majesty's vote a GoldenSnitch that would destroy the Kingdom, and
** Feeding protesters to the Beast (though the voters don't know this).
* {{Cliffhanger}}: UsefulNotes/WinstonChurchill calls to summon the Doctor's help as a Dalek silhouette glides towards him...
* {{Cloudcuckoolander}}: Eleven, turning it up to eleven, fittingly. He's a good deal odder than Ten or Nine.
* ContinuityNod:
** The solar flares that drove people off the Earth, previously mentioned in "[[Recap/DoctorWhoS12E2TheArkInSpace The Ark in Space]]" and "[[Recap/DoctorWhoS12E3TheSontaranExperiment The Sontaran Experiment]]".
** There's a large [[Recap/DoctorWhoS28E7TheIdiotsLantern Magpie Electricals]] sign above the hole in the road.
** Liz 10 knows about [[Recap/DoctorWhoS29E2TheShakespeareCode the Doctor's affair with]] [[Recap/DoctorWhoS30E17E18TheEndOfTime the "Virgin Queen"]]. She also knows that the Doctor and UsefulNotes/QueenVictoria [[Recap/DoctorWhoS28E2ToothAndClaw didn't quite see eye to eye]].
** [[Recap/DoctorWhoS30E15PlanetOfTheDead "You look Time Lord."]]
** The Doctor's extremely brief explanation that he is the LastOfHisKind. "[[Recap/DoctorWhoS27E6Dalek Bad]] [[Recap/DoctorWhoS29E13LastOfTheTimeLords day]]" [[Recap/DoctorWhoS30E17E18TheEndOfTime indeed...]]
** Apparently the British government still believes that [[Series/{{Torchwood}} sending under-performing children to a]] FateWorseThanDeath [[Series/TorchwoodChildrenOfEarth for the benefit of society]] is acceptable.
** Churchill is an old friend of the Doctor. Indeed, he met the Sixth Doctor a few times in the [[Franchise/DoctorWhoExpandedUniverse Expanded Universe]] novels.
* CouldHaveAvoidedThisPlot: This is played for drama. All the grief and pain involving voting over the Star Whale's imprisonment and torture was unnecessary. The UK didn't capture it; ''it volunteered''.
* CoveredInGunge: Both the Doctor and Amy get covered in Star Whale vomit.
* CreepyChild: That girl in the recording with matching creepy nursery rhyme.
* DisproportionateRetribution: A little boy gets sent down to the Beast for... failing a test and then trying to take the lift.
* DramaPanes: Amy and the Doctor stare out of the windows of Starship U.K. while reflecting on the outcome of the episode, looking out over the city-ship with a binary star system ahead of them. The Doctor points out to Amy that her choice could have killed everyone on Starship U.K. She points out that if he'd gone through with his plans, he would have killed an innocent Star Whale, and the very last one, so far as they know. Amy draws a comparison between the Star Whale and the Doctor, "Very old and very kind, and the very last of his kind."
* EasilyForgiven: The whale decides not to make a big thing about being tortured for 300-odd years and continues to serve humanity voluntarily.
* EverybodyLives: While it's implied that people have been fed to the Whale through the centuries, from the start of this episode to the end not a single character dies.
* EarthThatWas: Earth was roasted by solar flares. Now the countries are spaceships.
* EmpireWithADarkSecret: England, Wales, and Northern Ireland (Scotland as mentioned in the episode built their own ship) are being carried through space on a star whale which they torture to control the speed -- they know they can't justify their actions, but they're afraid that freeing the whale will destroy the ship. Thank goodness for Amy Pond, really. There's also the fact that they feed anyone who finds out the truth and disagrees with it to the whale. Or simply someone who doesn't do his homework. Luckily, the whale won't eat children.
* FaceRevealingTurn: An unusual example — the Smilers have ''three'' faces, smiling, frowning and GAAH!
* FailedASpotCheck: [[Recap/DoctorWhoS28E4TheGirlInTheFireplace This isn't the first time]] that the plot might have been vastly simplified if the Doctor had bothered to fly his TARDIS around to take a good look at a spaceship before parking on it.
* FamousFamousFictional: Inverted: Queen Elizabeth X lists various of her ancestors who have met the Doctor before in reverse order. Before [[UsefulNotes/ElizabethII Liz II]] and [[UsefulNotes/QueenVictoria Vicky]] and [[UsefulNotes/ElizabethI the Virgin Queen]], she mentions that the Doctor was the drinking buddy of a King Henry XII.
* {{Foreshadowing}}:
** The rhyme recited by the girl on the Vator video-screen starts out with "A horse and a man, above, below". What do people use horses for? Carrying people and/or pulling vehicles.
** "[[Recap/DoctorWhoS33E13TheNameOfTheDoctor And then I'll have to find a new name, cause I won't be the Doctor anymore]]".
** [[Recap/DoctorWhoS35E11HeavenSent One face later,]] something happens to the Doctor himself that's similar to what happened to the Queen.
* FriendToAllChildren:
** The Doctor cannot help but stop to help a crying child.
** The Beast Below volunteered its services to lift all of the UK (except Scotland, which already had its own ship) because it can't stand to let children suffer and die.
** Liz 10 gives this vibe when talking to Mandy as well. The little girl relaxes the minute she recognizes her queen.
* GoldenSnitch: The Queen's vote, down in the dungeon of the Tower, will automatically stop the torture, but at the apparent cost of the entire Kingdom. It's no wonder that she always chose to [[/folder]]

[[folder: forget ]]
for centuries.
* GoneToTheFuture: The voting booth identifies Amy on the voter rolls, but says her marital status is "Not Available". Convenient, given she's left from the eve of her wedding, wouldn't you say?
* GunsAkimbo: "I'm the bloody Queen, mate! Basically, ''I rule''."
* HumansAreTheRealMonsters: The scary "Beast Below" is actually a GentleGiant that the humans constantly torture in order to goad forwards.
* IDidWhatIHadToDo: Those who know the "impossible truth" aren't proud of what they've done; they considered it necessary to save the Kingdom.
-->'''Presenter:''' Here, then, is the truth about ''Starship UK'', and the price that has been paid for the safety of the British people. May God have mercy on our souls.
* ImprobableInfantSurvival: Justified, as the Star Whale refusing to eat children is the clue as to what's really going on.
* InternalHomage:
** As in "[[Recap/DoctorWhoS27E13ThePartingOfTheWays The Parting of the Ways]]", the Doctor has to make a moral choice he does not want to, before the companion intervenes.
** As in ''Series/{{Torchwood}}'''s "[[Recap/TorchwoodS2E4Meat Meat]]", our heroes have to come to the decision on whether or not to kill an innocent extraterrestrial whale for the greater good.
* KarmaHoudini: The secret police, who fed the Star Whale with everyone who hit the protest button, and "undesirables", face no punishment from Liz 10 when she finally figures out what they're doing.
* KingBobTheNth: Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth X of the United Kingdom.
* LaserGuidedAmnesia: The "Forget" button in the voting booths; the last 20 minutes of your life didn't happen.
* LastOfHisKind: The Star Whale moving the ship is the last one. Amy compares its situation to the Doctor.
* MamaBear: Liz 10 is furious at the idea of someone feeding her subjects to the Star Whale.
* MeaningfulEcho: After explaining the situation and telling Amy what he wants her to do, the Doctor silences her protests by saying it's this or she'll have to go back to Leadworth. When she finally agrees, he says "Gotcha." By the end of the story, after she convinces him that she knew exactly what would happen when she freed the whale, they embrace, as she whispers "Gotcha" in his ear.
* MyGodWhatHaveIDone: Liz 10 discovers that the Star Whale's torture is carried out on her orders, and she resets her memory every ten years when she's told about it again so she can remain innocently ignorant of this fact. The look on her face as everything falls into place shows she definitely feels this way.
* NaiveAnimalLover: The twist is, it's the ''Star Whale'' being naïve [[HumansAreBastards around people]]. It was happy to act as a living ship to save everyone for their children's sake. But people build their ship around it, and sought to enslave the benign creature instead, to make it do what they wanted. Torture, or no torture, the beast still wants to help, [[RuleOfEmpathy because it loves the children so much]].
* NecessarilyEvil: The humans torture the whale because they believed it was the only way to navigate the ship and they fed it rubbish and people because they thought it was the only way to feed it. However, the humans couldn't understand what the whale was doing, it came to them willingly to save the children and they didn't need to torture it.
* NoseTapping: The Doctor does this when giving the "escaped fish" excuse to the people who see him put a glass of water on the floor.
* NotSoDifferentRemark: Amy saves the day by making this realization. Incredibly old, a FriendToAllChildren, last of their kind...
* ObfuscatingInsanity: The Doctor's excuse for putting a glass of water on the floor.
-->'''The Doctor:''' Sorry, checking all the water in this area; there's an escaped fish.
* PajamaCladHero: Amy spends the whole episode in her nightdress, á la [[Franchise/TheHitchhikersGuideToTheGalaxy Arthur Dent]].
* PatrickStewartSpeech: Inverted. "Nobody HUMAN has anything to say to me today!" And then the inversion itself gets subverted, when Amy intuits the true nature of the situation, which the Doctor has failed to do, and intervenes just in time to stop him making a mistake for which he'd never be able to forgive himself.
* PercussivePickpocket:
-->'''The Doctor:''' This fell out of her pocket when I accidentally bumped into her. Took me four goes.
* PlotIrrelevantVillain: The Smilers don't appear to do anything of note except look a bit grumpy. They're eerie enough, fitting three faces on a two-sided head, and they appear in some very creepy scenes, but it's never clear whether they're actually causing trouble or they just happen to be there at the time. The closest they come to participating in the plot is marking a child's homework in the [[ColdOpening cold opening]].
* PoorCommunicationKills: Man, wouldn't everything have been easier if the Star Whale could have just told them it was volunteering its services? That happens when you can't even communicate in the audible wavelengths.
* PoweredByAForsakenChild: Powered by an Endlessly Tortured SpaceWhale.
* PressXToDie: Feel horrified from what you've learned from the video? Then press [[/folder]]

[[folder: protest ]]
and your vote could be the one that condemns the entire Kingdom to death, or maybe something will happen before then, like getting sent into the mouth of the beast powering the ship.
* PunchClockVillain: It turns out neither the Smilers nor the Winders are actually evil. They were acting on the Queen's orders. The Doctor doesn't like people who are JustFollowingOrders.
-->'''The Doctor:''' [[Recap/DoctorWhoS27E12BadWolf And with that sentence, you just lost the right to even talk to me.]]
* ReallySevenHundredYearsOld: Liz 10, due to LaserGuidedAmnesia, is surprised to discover she's over ''four times'' as old as she thought — over 200 as opposed to 50. It's because her body's age clock has been drastically slowed down so that she can rule Starship UK long enough for them to recolonize.
* TheReveal: The end of the episode reveals that ''Starship UK'' is in fact riding on top of a Star Whale.
* RoboticReveal: The hooded men — the Winders — reveal themselves to be half-Smiler by turning their heads around.
* RoyalsWhoActuallyDoSomething: Liz 10 has been trying to solve Starship UK's problems for two hundred years.
* SadisticChoice: Everybody's options basically boil down to: 1) Continue torturing the Star Whale, or 2) kill the entire country. At least, so they think...
* SchizoTech: Life on the spaceship involves a large number of very low-tech things.
* SchmuckBait:
** "Oh, don't mind me! Never could resist a 'Keep Out' sign."
** The "[[/folder]]

[[folder: protest ]]
" button.
** "If this is just the mouth, I'd love to see the stomach! ...Though not right now."
* SelfPlagiarism: Like Moffat's "[[Recap/DoctorWhoS27E10TheDoctorDances The Doctor Dances]]", the resolution to the main problem is solved by an action people at first believed would cause another effect and so tried to avoid. Nancy tried to avoid Jamie for fear of becoming infected by the Empty Child, whilst Liz 10 always chose to forget since she believed releasing the star whale would destroy Starship UK.
* ShoutOut:
** ''Franchise/StarWars'': "Help us, Doctor, you're our only hope."
** ''Then'' the heroes fall down the shaft into what appears to be a dump, where they realize that 1) [[Film/ANewHope there is something alive down there]] and 2) [[Film/TheEmpireStrikesBack they are IN the mouth of the Beast]].
** The lettering of "STARSHIP UK" on the voting booth TV screens resembles the old BBC logo, especially as seen on [[http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/1/13/BBC-one1969.jpg the '70s BBC]] StationIdent. Though, while the lettering was similar, it was more likely a reference to [[http://hub.tv-ark.org.uk/images/bbcone/images_idents/1960s/bbctv_continuity_a.jpg this ident]].
** The story seems to [[WholePlotReference take some cues]] from Creator/UrsulaKLeGuin's story ''Literature/TheOnesWhoWalkAwayFromOmelas'', especially with regard to the "[[/folder]]

[[folder: protest ]]
" and "[[/folder]]

[[folder: forget ]]
" buttons. In this case, however, the ones who walk away from Omelas - or indeed Starship UK - don't so much ''walk'' away as they are fed to the titular Beast.
* SpaceWhale: The Star Whale is a humongous creature that lives in space. Legends say it guided the early space travellers.
* StealthInsult: After the Doctor hits the [[/folder]]

[[folder: protest ]]
button and he and Amy fall about 500 metres down, Amy asks where they are. The Doctor takes a long smell and says "I'd say [sniff] Lancashire". They're standing on a tongue covered in rubbish.
* SuddenlyShouting: A sign that the Doctor's officially gotten too angry even for TranquilFury.
-->'''The Doctor:''' Nobody talk to me. Nobody ''HUMAN'' HAS ''ANYTHING TO SAY TO ME TODAY!''
* TakeAThirdOption: Double-subverted; the Doctor's Third Option is almost as bad as the other two, but Amy realizes the Second Option won't have the results everyone thinks.
-->'''The Doctor:''' Look, three options. One, I let the star whale continue in unendurable agony for hundreds more years. Two, I kill everyone on this ship. Three, I murder a beautiful, innocent creature as painlessly as I can. And then I find a new name, 'cos I won't be the Doctor any more.
* TakeThat: When the Doctor and Amy are in a smelly, icky part of Starship UK, the Doctor guesses they are in Lancashire.[[note]][[HilariousInHindsight Amusingly enough]], where his next female companion would hail from.[[/note]]
* TheThemeParkVersion: Starship UK is like a "Britainland" theme park made of a hodgepodge of British props, and it looks good. For once, the TARDIS blends in perfectly with its surroundings.
* ThisIsGonnaSuck: A tide of Star Whale vomit rushes towards the Doctor and Amy:
-->'''The Doctor:''' Right then! This isn't going to be big on dignity.
** Even better, while she looks appropriately horrified he's grinning madly.
* TimeTravelTenseTrouble:
-->'''Amy:''' ''[about when she will be/was getting/got married]'' Well, it's kinda weird. A long time ago, tomorrow morning. I wonder what I did.
* TitleDrop: Three times:
** "Though the man above might say hello, expect no love from the beast below..."
** "No, that's not going to work on me. Big ol' beast below decks, and everyone who protests gets shoved down its throat. Is that how it works?"
** "The dream must end, the world must know, we all depend on the beast below."
* TownWithADarkSecret: It's a starship, but the trope still holds. That's what tips the Doctor off. A child is silently crying and no adult nearby is comforting her, because they know why she's crying and don't want to acknowledge its cause.
* TurtleIsland: The spaceship is revealed to have been built on a galactic whale and the humans enslaved it under the belief they found the creature by chance and needed to torture it so they can control where it goes. In reality, the whale came to them because it wanted to save the children and they didn't need to torture it or sacrifice people to it in the first place.
* TwoFaced: The Smilers have three faces, one for happiness, one for displeasure, and one for rage. Since their heads turn 180 degrees and not 120 degrees, they apparently have a hidden arm in the back that switches whichever faces are not in use.
* TheUnreveal: "Amy Pond. Age: 1,306. Marital Status: ''[Amy waits in suspense]'' ... Unknown."
* VomitIndiscretionShot: Shown from ''inside'' the Star Whale's mouth, no less.
* WhatTheHellHero:
** Amy calls the Doctor out on his choice to lobotomize the Star Whale.
** The Doctor calls out everybody on the ship for setting the situation up in the first place, and Amy for not telling him the truth.
* WhiteMaskOfDoom: Initially played straight when Liz 10 is introduced, but then becomes subverted when it turns out she's one of the good guys. Then it becomes a ChekhovsGun, allowing the Doctor to deduce Liz's true age.
* TheWorldIsJustAwesome: Amy's expression as she's drifting in space (with the Doctor hanging onto her foot), protected only by the TARDIS forcefield.
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->''[[Recap/DoctorWhoS31E3VictoryOfTheDaleks "Tricky situation, Doctor. Potentially very dangerous. I think I'm going to need you."]]''
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